Introducing: dimorphic idealism

Source! It’s this talk:

So I’ll be on transcription duty for some time.

29:40:

…and that strong arguments have been made that it was actually colonialism and the kind of capitalism that it spawned that established the binary and heteronormative framework for thinking about and living gender for the first time. Indeed, if we consider the work of Maria Lugones, drawing on the work of Anibal Quijano, then colonial arrangements are the context and course of a wide range of issues that we think of as belonging to normative gender relations, including heteronormativity, dimorphic idealism, the patriarchal family, and the very norms that govern appearance. 30:24

So there we go, she does indeed say it. Now I’ll have to find out wtf “dimorphic idealism” is.

I suspect this project will take days. My Xmas present!

5 Responses to “Introducing: dimorphic idealism”

Leave a Comment

Subscribe without commenting